🇸🇪 American Couple Reacts "Living with the Dark Winters in Sweden | Midnight Sun & Polar Night"

🇸🇪 American Couple Reacts "Living with the Dark Winters in Sweden | Midnight Sun & Polar Night" | The Demouchets REACT
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Пікірлер: 106

  • @emeliefr222
    @emeliefr222 Жыл бұрын

    Nah we're from Sweden, we all know the earth is round

  • @TheDemouchetsREACT

    @TheDemouchetsREACT

    Жыл бұрын

    We wish more people could visit to see what you all see!

  • @miskatuppurainen4115
    @miskatuppurainen4115 Жыл бұрын

    I live in the south of Finland and the winter is pretty hard sometimes. When you go to Work/School it's dark outside and when you come back from work it's dark. But the summers in the nordic countries are magical. And it's not cold in the summers it gets 77-90 degrees fahrenheit or 30 celsius.

  • @TheDemouchetsREACT

    @TheDemouchetsREACT

    Жыл бұрын

    We can see how this would be depressing for some people. This takes getting used to each time the time changes here.

  • @Loopydude80

    @Loopydude80

    9 ай бұрын

    if u live in south of finland u cant complain

  • @magdalenabozyk1798
    @magdalenabozyk1798 Жыл бұрын

    Here in the north, decorating for Christmas with lights gets another meaning than it is in other places. Because it's also beautiful and practical in itself. December tends to be the darkest month - and then you have all of those lights everywhere.

  • @loevet2
    @loevet2 Жыл бұрын

    In the beginning of your video, you ask "How do you live for a month with no light?". Well, the answer is CHRISTMAS. In Sweden Christmas is all about light. We don´t care about Christmas miracles and all that. Two days before Christmas we have the darkest day of the whole year. Christmas marks the turning point. 4 weeks before Christmas all Swedes put up shining stars and candlesticks in the windows. We light candles in the middle of the tables when we eat and outside some stores you can see small bonfires. We sing Christmas songs with the word "light" repeated over and over. 10 days before Christmas we celebrate Lucia, which is a saint who is bringing us light. When the winter darkness is here, it means Christmas is close. Without darkness - no real Christmas. That is how we survive!

  • @daginn896
    @daginn896 Жыл бұрын

    I live in this region, in Norway, Swedens neighbouring country. There is no "cultural" shock going to other places, remember, in the autumn and spring, we have equal amount of light and darkness :) So we know how that feels too. The summers are bright, winters are dark, autumn and spring is "normal".

  • @j3mixa

    @j3mixa

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in Northern Finland and I think that there is a sort of a cultural shock when I go on a vacation to Southern Europe for example. Yes the length of the day is about the same there as it is at home in spring and fall. It just always feels so weird to me that daytime temperatures are like in a July heat wave here but nights are dark like in the fall. It somehow feels wrong when you are used to the fact the hot day also equals no darkness at night.

  • @linhan8683
    @linhan8683 Жыл бұрын

    One of the biggest things that are hard to adapt to when you move south is that it’s warm and dark at the same time. When I go on vacation, It always feels so alien that it can be summer temperatures but the sun sets at 8 pm.

  • @alexandrasinclair924
    @alexandrasinclair924 Жыл бұрын

    I live in the outskirts of Stockholm. We don’t get winters like this, the contrasts are less clear. We do have light all hours in the summer and a few, very short, hours of sun in the winter. Usually it’s overcast. The children are better at accepting the natural changes, mine thinks the entire world is a playground when it is covered in snow. They can be out for hours sliding, climbing and building forts. Me- not so much

  • @Lindeman08
    @Lindeman0810 ай бұрын

    4:21 It has been know by humans for thousands of years that the Earth is a sphere. It's a scientific fact and I think many of my countrymen feel the same way I do; that it's sad that some people are still scientifically illiterate in this day and age.

  • @magnum_cx8805
    @magnum_cx880512 күн бұрын

    I’m from Sweden, but I lived in Alabama for a year. The summer was way too fucking hot and I enjoyed the tornado season (we didn’t get hit by any tornadoes thankfully) because we rarely get rain that heavy (just lighter rain much more periodically). The thing that really culture shocked me though was the lack of seasons. In Sweden we have such a clear distinction of 4 very different season. But in Alabama I only actively noticed two, the hot half of the year and the not as hot rainy part of the year. It took a WEEK for all the leaves to change colors and fall, not a month or so like I’m used to. Time and my life felt so slow and static. There’s something so special about really seeing time pass all around you. Seeing all the beautiful fall colors slowly make them way onto all the plant life when it finally cools from the summer and you can start wearing cozy clothes again. Hearing the birds return and start singing to announce spring after a loooong dark winter, bright leaves sprouting up all around you and smelling all the flowers come back to bloom. Even if I move again I’ll always come back to Sweden. I might even move further north just so that I can feel the shifting of the light and seasons even more.

  • @svealusmagi4165
    @svealusmagi4165 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for watching this video.Norway,Sweden , Finland ,Russia are the closest to the polar pole. We also have such cold winters in Estonia . Estonia is close to Finland.Estonia is one of the three Baltic countries. Geography Now ,it has introductions of all these countries. It is very interesting. We don`t have earthquakes,tornadoes,tsunamis either. Every country has its own history and it has also influenced the development of the country`s culture.

  • @Brendo2386

    @Brendo2386

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm going to Iceland, Finland, Eesti, Lithuania, Latvia and many others on a 2 month holiday soon :)

  • @Pitetjej
    @Pitetjej Жыл бұрын

    I also live in northern Sweden; around 400 km north of where Jonna lives, and around 200 km south of the Arctic circle. Here the summer sunset (in June) is at midnight, and the sunrise around 1 AM. (24 hours of daylight.) In December the sunrise is at 9:30 AM, and the sunset at around 1 PM. (Around 4 hours of daylight.) I live in an apartment in the city (or a smalltown to be more exact), but my dream is buying a house in the countryside. I love - LOVE! - the summers! That´s my favorite time of the year, and I LOVE the daylight nights. Maybe because I was born during one of those nights... early July in the middle of the night ;-) Unfortunately the summers here can be pretty unpredictable. It CAN be sun and 30 degrees (Celsius), but it can just as likely rain the entire summer and be like 15 degrees... The most common winter temperature is between -15 and -25 degrees, but it can just as well drop below -30. The coldest I experienced (but this was only one time!) was -42 degrees. That was way back in 8th grade (1999); and I can promise that it was a COLD walk to school that day! Seasonal Affective Disorder (seasonal depression) is VERY common here, especially during winter months, due to the lack of sunlight. So our winters I could definitely live without! But I would never trade the summers; not for anything!

  • @TheDemouchetsREACT

    @TheDemouchetsREACT

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for sharing! We were shocked when we first learned of Seasonal Affective Disorder, but now we greatly understand. We loved how this was addressed in the video by sharing her coping mechanisms.

  • @linnear9872
    @linnear9872 Жыл бұрын

    I live in the middle of Sweden (still counted as the north) and we have about 4 hours of sunlight in the winter and then in summer it never goes dark for the first part of summer. Temperature wise I'd say in winter we have between -15 c to -30 c ( so 5 degreed farenheit to -22 farenheit) and then in summer we have between 23-28 C ( being 73 F to 82 f).

  • @lullebulle2
    @lullebulle28 ай бұрын

    I love that she spoke about being honest with oneself and come to a realisation that you cant feel the same in the winter and in the summer, and i also think that is where alot of people get depressed, because when winter comes, your work place still expect the same level from you.. and that might be to much for some people and they cant understand why they feel different.

  • @emilpedersen1043
    @emilpedersen10432 ай бұрын

    From the north of Sweden 🇸🇪 we definitely know that the earth is round!!!!! Otherwise we wouldn’t have the conditions we have!!!!! And we are educated 🤪😜

  • @wateronglass
    @wateronglass11 ай бұрын

    It's because the Earth is round that polar night (no sun) and midnight sun (always sun) can happen. People living this far north are really affected by the Earth being round. The earth rotational axis is tilted 23.5 degrees (relative to the Sun-Earth direction). The tilt is always in the same direction, and when Earth is on one side of the Sun (the northen part of Earth tilting towards the Sun) we have midnight sun this far north (above latitude 90-23.5 = 66.5 N) and 6 months later we tilt away from the Sun, meaning no Sun.

  • @soderlund3610
    @soderlund3610 Жыл бұрын

    Today there is electricity, TV, phones, internet. Imagine living here thousands of years ago.

  • @annawettergren3054
    @annawettergren3054 Жыл бұрын

    The question "how do you feel about the Earth being round or flat?" There is no feeling about it. It just is. Such a wierd question to ask. Don't be these people who think that anyones opinion is equal in worth to facts.

  • @TheDemouchetsREACT

    @TheDemouchetsREACT

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing your perspective. Don’t be one of those people who think we depend on a comment to validate our beliefs.

  • @viivi005

    @viivi005

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheDemouchetsREACT Flat earth isn't actually a question here in the nordic countries or at least I never had heard about anyone thinking that it is until tiktok lol. I think it's more of a american thing but for us it's obvious it's round simply because of the education we get on our own climate and light changes and all🤷‍♀️🌚

  • @Sebod95

    @Sebod95

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheDemouchetsREACT That right there is the issue, you BELIEVE the earth is flat. The rest of us know for a fact that it isn't.

  • @magdalenabozyk1798
    @magdalenabozyk1798 Жыл бұрын

    Up here in the north we have something more that is provided for us due to the tilt of the axis - very long sunsets and sunrises. By long I don't mean how long you see the sun, but by how long the horizon and the sky is still light after the sunset, and how long it's light before the sunrise. (At the equator instead the sun sets and rises almost instantly - it's almost sudden when the sun sets or rises) Where I live, the sun sets during the summer, but in June/July the nights are more of a dusk than a proper night. It's like you have a dusk/twilight that lasts for a couple of hours. This type of light is magical. To experience similar conditions that I have, you "only" need to go to Anchorage in Alaska. Because I live about the same up north as them. Jonna though, you'd have to go to Canada at least.

  • @magdalenabozyk1798
    @magdalenabozyk1798 Жыл бұрын

    It's not a "wham" it's now 24 h dark and wham 24 h light. The length of the day and night switches from day to day. The extremes are during the summer/winter solstice (around 21st June/21st December), and then there's equal amount of sun and darkness (12 h each) during spring and autumn equinoxes. During an equinox everyone, everywhere has the same amount of day/night. I still marvel at the changes. It's enough that I've had a cold for few days and then realize "wait a minute, it used to be dark at this hour" just few days later. Because the length of the day can differ around ½h from day to day when the changes are the most extreme.

  • @Westcountrynordic
    @Westcountrynordic Жыл бұрын

    To much less extent parts of Northern Scotland also have a lot less daylight during the winter months and daylight as late as 11pm in the summer.

  • @Klockren9000
    @Klockren9000 Жыл бұрын

    The winters are the tough part you wake up go to work and it´s pitch black and and you come home from work it´s pitch black and its like this from around november to march

  • @Balleehuuu
    @Balleehuuu Жыл бұрын

    There is no controversial point in regard to the shape of the earth at all - only if you are in a flat earth bubble ... If you know someone who can't get their head around how the earth is a globe, I recommend the videos from "Professor Dave explains", "Dave McKeegan" or from "planarwalk" (for the people who like an new zealand accent in those videos).

  • @oceanmythjormundgandr3891
    @oceanmythjormundgandr3891 Жыл бұрын

    When it gets dark for months it is not just the darkness that makes things depressing, it is the lack of vitamin D from the sun. Like, you need supplements! Even in the southern parts of Norway and Sweden. All day every day from September to April (at least I do)!. Even in the south it sometimes feels like it is never "day" and I find myself struggling to get things done since my mind is telling me that it is early morning or evening. And I always find myself just in a stare of "urgh". I know that it will happen, so it is easier to get things done when I know what the problem is, but it is still hard to comprehend the time and find energy.

  • @jespergranstrom5267

    @jespergranstrom5267

    Жыл бұрын

    no we are addepted to this enviorments, i never know anyone who needs supplements ever. u should check ur ancestry maybe u migriated here couple generation ago? a true blooded scandinavians are adapted to this enviorment. or u have a meatless diet.

  • @oceanmythjormundgandr3891

    @oceanmythjormundgandr3891

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jespergranstrom5267 Hehe, I am half carribean. My doc just told me "take supplements in all months with an R in its name" but even my Mother (Northern Swedish with ancestry in Finland and Norway for many generations) needs supplements and her job isn´t an office job so she gets outside all the time. Some people just never check with their doctor if they need supplements and thus never take supplements. My mom only tested her blood for vitamins etc, because it was convenient with some other tests she was taking, and she found out she was low on vitamin D. So even she takes supplements in late fall and the winter. So some people just don´t know that their tiredness in the dark months can be because of a slight or massive supplement issue. Some just think "oh, it's winter depression" and move on. But if you don´t have an issue with the dark months you probably get the necessary vitamin D in your diet during the dark months.

  • @patriciamuenimulwa1808
    @patriciamuenimulwa1808 Жыл бұрын

    I am surprised there was no mention of the Northern lights. Beautiful.

  • @viivi005

    @viivi005

    Жыл бұрын

    There was a mention actually :)

  • @fannyberisson3773
    @fannyberisson37733 ай бұрын

    Hi im from sweden to but the south in småland I would say that the summers in småland could be very warm some days and rainy windy another and in winter it could be like 10-20 minus while other days it could be 5+. But personely I would say that the begining of spring is the worst time of the year because the snow is just melting and it's so wet and becaus one day it could rain the next it could be 15-20+ and another it could be 10 minus. And that is calld april weather.

  • @SaraElenaPettersson
    @SaraElenaPettersson24 күн бұрын

    25 degrees Celsius is a warm summer day up here 😊

  • @SilverionX
    @SilverionX Жыл бұрын

    I live much further south than this in a city called Gothenburg, Sweden's second largest city. It's not as extreme as this, but I had difficulty sleeping in the summer because I'm very light sensitive and my body refused to calm down. I've gotten better at managing it and I got myself one of those sleep masks you put in front of your eyes, that helped a lot. You do slow down a little bit in the winter, but there's street lights if you live in cities that turn on automatically when it gets dark, so it's not like you're fumbling around in pitch black. Summers are quite warm, partially because the sun is up most of the time. Around 20-30 degrees Celsius is the standard temperature here further south. Also, it's a sliding scale from light to dark, so most of the year it's just a little more dark or a little more light than usual. The video is just talking about the most extreme times of the year. Where I live we don't get that much snow any more thanks to climate change (and because we live next to the ocean). Just very cold rain a lot of the time. Thanks global warming. But we have no earth quakes, no hurricanes, no cyclones. Hardly any natural disasters at all except the last decade or two we have some droughts and floods due to the change in temperatures. If you can take 6 dark months a year it's a good place to live, even weather wise. Just dress appropriately. :)

  • @deportedsouls3165
    @deportedsouls3165 Жыл бұрын

    I hope the "earth being round or flat"-question was just a joke. Swedes are educated and taught about the universe during the first years in school. 😊 About the same age we learn English.

  • @johankaewberg9512
    @johankaewberg9512 Жыл бұрын

    Jonna Jonnson. The personification of Sweden.

  • @viktorlindqvist5308
    @viktorlindqvist5308 Жыл бұрын

    Round’s earth, thats literally why the day and night cycle works the way it does due to our position on the globe during that spin

  • @dsjoakim35
    @dsjoakim35 Жыл бұрын

    I live pretty close to where Jonna lives. We do have sun in the winter but only for a couple of hours every day, and in the winter it is almost always overcast so not much of the light gets through anyway. Winter depression is a very real thing for many people here, and it is because of the darkness. I can definitely feel it, and right now in the beginning of April, I can not wait for summer.

  • @KimOfDrac
    @KimOfDrac Жыл бұрын

    We can get 95-100 degrees fahrenheit on hot days in summer and -5 degrees fahrenheit on cold days in winter here on the west coast of Sweden😎

  • @Hankthespank
    @Hankthespank Жыл бұрын

    Hello from Sweden. I just had to comment on the earth sun flat round thingy.😂 Of course we believe the earth is round (oval) and since the earth spins around its own axis, its relation to the sun isnt the same everywhere on the planet to put it shortly. Also the depression thing is certainly real. Dealing with both no darkness during nights and no sunlight during days can really mess with your mood and hormones which makes it common for us to take pills to help deal with that, but it doesnt mean we are depressed in nature, just that we need a bit of help sometimes to work properly all year around.🎉

  • @carro-xb9oz
    @carro-xb9oz Жыл бұрын

    the summers is awsome we have warmth and hot here to:) u should come visit the north during june and july and during the polarnight its an experience u have to do , can be really cold but it doesent matter when u see the stars and the northern lights

  • @karl-erikmumler9820
    @karl-erikmumler9820 Жыл бұрын

    As someone living in Sweden it's really hard to see how the math works out for our seasons and shadows without a spherical earth. As someone who has studied physics I cant even understand how a flat earth would maintain structural integrity and/or gravity and/or ect. No offense intended. Secondly, as you say, people adapt to where they end up. Jonna lives in a more rural setting further north than most nordic population clusters but she still has electricity, internet, emergency services and stuff. Cold is easily dealt with by proper clothing and infrastructure. "Det finns inget dåligt väder bara dåliga kläder" - "There is no bad weather - just bad/innapropriate clothing" - Swedish saying. The light and the dark is however somewhat beyond our technological level besides turning our cities into some of the most light-polluting per capita areas of the planet. My "culture shock" when I travel nearer the equator is often how fast the sun can go down. One tends to forget that.

  • @annelinesiebritz1206
    @annelinesiebritz1206 Жыл бұрын

    Very educational

  • @sassa5818
    @sassa5818 Жыл бұрын

    A hot summers day is temperatures touching 77 and beyond, 86-87 fahrenheit would be considered a heatwave. And that does happen almost every summer for at least a week or longer these days (Global warming i guess).

  • @carro-xb9oz
    @carro-xb9oz Жыл бұрын

    when i got to us i had the jetlag as normal but it took me just a few days to adapt to it.i was in new york and florida, np at all but when i got home to sweden it was a releif:)

  • @carro-xb9oz
    @carro-xb9oz Жыл бұрын

    ure so welcome to us up here and as i live just 50 km from her we have the same as u watched

  • @jespergranstrom5267
    @jespergranstrom5267 Жыл бұрын

    as a swede i hate may-june- july becuse of lightness all day long,bugs and pollen xD autum and ealry winter is my time of year =)

  • @jimbombadill
    @jimbombadill7 ай бұрын

    depression dosnt realy come from the light or dark, it comes from trying to live in that in a modern life...where we squeeze in work and what "we have to do" living like slaves after a clock. In the old days winter time was a time of peace and quiet with not much to do, you rested!

  • @Mr_Seppo
    @Mr_Seppo Жыл бұрын

    She says its dark in winter, no its not, the snow makes it bright, i live up in nothen part of sweden, i love the cold winter and the hot summer, the late winter before the spring, i dont like and the late fall before the snow, i dont like, the rest i love.

  • @martymcfly6914
    @martymcfly6914 Жыл бұрын

    Jonnas Ancestors were Vikings she has Viking blood. Viking mentality

  • @aidenharvey3784
    @aidenharvey3784 Жыл бұрын

    This video helps answer the question of why do Nordic countries rank so well in terms of prosperity and equality, yet have high rates of suicide and depression. For countries like Swede, living without the sun for a month or more while also getting accustomed to morning being night and night being morning can be taxing on the mind. Furthermore, all that time without vitamin D can cause fatigue, depression, sadness, and sleep deprivation. A general rule for Swedes is "during the Winter and spring, we are grumpy and introverted, so don't visit or talk to us during such times. During the summer and fall, we are friendly and outgoing".

  • @starvictory7079

    @starvictory7079

    Жыл бұрын

    There are no high rates of suicide in Sweden. That's a myth.

  • @carro-xb9oz
    @carro-xb9oz Жыл бұрын

    we have between 20 to 30 degrees in the summer so its not cold

  • @kunilsen2519
    @kunilsen251911 ай бұрын

    The only reason the sun is always up or never comes up depending on the season is because the earth is round lol If it was flat the sun would always "move" in the same pattern. but because it's round, the placement of the planet will create different patterns for the sun as the planet's movement is always constant and the sun cant reach or always will reach certain parts of it. And as the planet moves, the seasons change.

  • @Slulle
    @Slulle Жыл бұрын

    I hope u like the cold also. in north sweden wintertime there is around - 40 -45 celsius

  • @TheGuilty11
    @TheGuilty118 ай бұрын

    How long it would take to adjust for Nordic cycle if you come from closer to equator? One week trip = you probably wont even notice the difference even if you com in the middle of the winter. But if you move here to stay....i think it will take years to adjust. It is not as simple as you might take. To come from steady sunny place to country where contrast of sunlight is so different between seasons is very hard.

  • @rogermagnusson115
    @rogermagnusson115 Жыл бұрын

    Yes The winter in Sweden is long.. But Sweden is a long country from north to South... America has winter to.. Exept The South er statens.. Dakotas, montana,, Chicago, new york city, virginia

  • @Sebod95
    @Sebod95 Жыл бұрын

    Well since you asked, i live in Sweden and the earth is flat. It's not even a conversation to have, a greek dude figured it out 3000 years ago in the desert. I think we've managed to confirm it since then....

  • @Anastazka00
    @Anastazka00 Жыл бұрын

    Aww, thank you for your reaction, finally! 😊 Its caused by the rotation of the Earth's axis, maybe better to look up some nice visualisation. I don't think flat earthers even exist in Europe to be honest. The changes in light Are gradual, So During the spring And autumn equinox, the day And the night Are same lenght (everywhere on Earth actually). You basically experience all kinds of light conditions. So Its not problem at all to adapt in terms of light, especially since the tropical light conditions cames more "natural" to humans, as we Are originally from there. t The only think Is that in places without seasons, you don't get those "time reminders". But I think you guys Also live in place with 4 seasons, So, you can imagine. Summer Is for party, outdoor sports, Winter for reading And introspection, etc. Not having these cycles can feel strange, But from the sun prespective, Its not So difficult.

  • @uniquename111
    @uniquename111 Жыл бұрын

    You asked about how kids are doing in a enviroment like that www.youtube.com/@Talasbuan This family also live offgrind in sweden with a child. It is a really nice family showing their everyday life and what they struggle with and how they solving things. They do speak english in the videos so you will be able to understand most of what is going on. You don't have to react too it but i wanted to leave the link so you could see for your self what kids do when living like this =)

  • @lullebulle2
    @lullebulle28 ай бұрын

    Its not hard to see that the earth is round if you know where to look, the sun not rising above the horison is one of the proofs.

  • @populusalba8461
    @populusalba846111 ай бұрын

    i live in sweden and it barely see it get really dark

  • @shaunsebata4798
    @shaunsebata4798 Жыл бұрын

    It sounded like someone is a flat Earther. The global explanation for no Sun winters is that the Sun is at the centre of the solar system and Earth is like a spinning figure skater who is a bit tilted. And we are making laps around the Sun at the same time. The white hair lady is experiencing all day Sun when figure skating Earth's head is facing the Sun. And white hair lady gets no Sun when Earth's feet are facing the Sun. PS. The Sun is not actually standing still. It's just that relative to Earth, it is.

  • @TheDemouchetsREACT

    @TheDemouchetsREACT

    Жыл бұрын

    Assumptions,assumptions 😂 Astrology/astronomy isn’t a hard subject.

  • @mickegatje
    @mickegatje11 ай бұрын

    Sweden has daylight savings time too

  • @Passioakka
    @Passioakka Жыл бұрын

    The midnight sun in summer and the absence of the sun during winter is depending on what latitude you live on. For midnight sun you have to go above the Arctic Circle and it is the same for no sun in wintertime. I live between the AC and where Jonna lives and it is as she says, we see a little sun during the darkest winter month IF there is a clear sky, but it mostly cloudy. You get more tired in winter, sleep more and working full time can be hard. But there is also a lot of fun things to do, go out in nature by skiing or by snowmobile, ice skating, ice fishing, playing in the snow. Vit D supplement is a most for people from areas down south and a most for people with darker skin due to less absorption because of the high level of pigment in the skin. I schedule my interest after what time of the year there is. In winter I read, watching movies, doing handicrafts and explore new recipes and so on. In summertime the energy level rises and I mostly live outside. I live in the countryside so I grow veggies, pick wild berries and mushrooms. We fishing and bathing in the river, cooking over open fire and live more of an outdoor life. The life up north is what you make of it, it has to do with accepting the conditions and make the best out of it.

  • @danielkarlsson258
    @danielkarlsson258 Жыл бұрын

    Jonna is a treasure!

  • @Loopydude80
    @Loopydude809 ай бұрын

    here in north of norrway we have 2 months whit out sun

  • @ShakorPicou
    @ShakorPicou10 ай бұрын

    This is why the northern and southern regions is called the top and bottom of the world or the polar ice caps and the middle is called the sun-belt for those with the Ludacris idea of a flat earth 🌎

  • @patrik78145
    @patrik78145 Жыл бұрын

    Personallyi don't get a shock from the light when travelling, but rather the heat. I really don't like being cold but I can't stand heat ! I prefer the cold and being close to nature, it make you humble, because nature at this latitude will eat you alive and spit you right back out in a heartbeat.

  • @Nevolet
    @Nevolet Жыл бұрын

    i wouldnt say i experience or struggle to adapt in any way if i travel to other countries (i'm swedish). The thing i notice mostly is difficulty to see stars in some countries, the dark looks really dark to me sometimes.

  • @Loopydude80
    @Loopydude809 ай бұрын

    you probably could not deal whit the lighte and dark ness here north

  • @petragrevstad2714
    @petragrevstad2714 Жыл бұрын

    I would be a bad northerner 😂. I’m in the southwest and we get six hours of sunlight during the darkest period and I think that’s hard. Snow is rare here, which actually makes it feel much darker. Winters are mild, summer a bit longer. Some day I’d like to experience the northern parts of my country but whenever I travel, I tend to choose warmer places.

  • @mousesuper20
    @mousesuper2011 ай бұрын

    Earth is almost a Sphere

  • @oddesen
    @oddesen11 ай бұрын

    where i live in Norway, we have no sun for 4 mounths in the winter.....but when you are borne up here, we kind of like the darkness :) greate channel btw, i like your videos :) wintertime we have temperatures between - 5 degrees to - 20 degrees......summertime, 20 degrees is greate ;)

  • @jespermeisel9799
    @jespermeisel9799 Жыл бұрын

    i comment before watching. it sucks. and its depressing. but in spring when i smell the blooming of it all its amazing, until i get my allergies...

  • @Cookie_moonlove
    @Cookie_moonlove Жыл бұрын

    22:03 well if you live where Jonna lives you have equal amounts of light and dark too in-between winter and summer. I think the only thing that can feel strange is having hot summer nights and darkness but it's not shocking it just a bit different to summer evenings and instead feels like when you have a warm autumn evening up in the north because then it's warm and dark in the evening. If you go to a warmer place with no snow in winter than it's just like part of autumn or spring up where Jonna lives etc. so I do not get what you think would be a "culture shock". Up where Jonna live you have all 4 seasons, all kinds of daylight time lengths etc, it just depends on the season so nothing is shocking. It's not like it goes from 24h dark to 24h light at the switch of a day but gradually changes through the seasons. Back in school where I'm from and I think most of the world, we got to learn how the earth spins round it's own axis and around the sun which explains this. I think you can find videos on YT that will show you and then you'll get why there is no "culture shock" when going elsewhere. It's also just good to know and to teach children.

  • @henriknielsen9674
    @henriknielsen967411 ай бұрын

    Flat earth is mostly an American thing (US). Most people of the North know about the planet being round , because they live with the consequences of the earth being round ,that's why we get the long summer days and long winter days (remember it doesn't just spin, it also tilt ) 😏

  • @astral7080
    @astral7080 Жыл бұрын

    If drawing a straight line from where Jonna lives in Sweden geographicly, you will end in the furtherst north of canada

  • @mikaelowe8430
    @mikaelowe843011 ай бұрын

    pls repost this video without the echo in the background pls 🙂 the echoing is kinda annoying and pls talk one at a time in the introduction so we can hear what you are saying pls🙂

  • @ivylasangrienta6093
    @ivylasangrienta6093 Жыл бұрын

    We have daylight savings time too! Hopefully the EU will implement the changes they promised and get rid of it!

  • @user-ko1cr2up7r
    @user-ko1cr2up7r Жыл бұрын

    america has the same in alaska

  • @andyacquah317
    @andyacquah317 Жыл бұрын

    Great video…. Buh the video is echoing I think, or it’s prolly my head phones.

  • @TheDemouchetsREACT

    @TheDemouchetsREACT

    Жыл бұрын

    Briefly. Thanks for bringing this to our attention.

  • @kristofferhellstrom

    @kristofferhellstrom

    Жыл бұрын

    Mmm.. I couldn't watch it on my tv. It was so annoying. Not used to ever hearing echoing on youtube videos. Aaah. The echo disappears at about 5 min.

  • @rogerforsman5064
    @rogerforsman5064 Жыл бұрын

    I have not seen a flat earth model of the earth that make any sens! You may be able to describe one phenomena and how that should work on a flat earth but when you apply that model to another phenomena you end up with contradicting measured reality!

  • @absolutmichel6
    @absolutmichel6 Жыл бұрын

    Hi, your video echoes when played on youtube...

  • @TheGuilty11
    @TheGuilty118 ай бұрын

    From Finland. Well i have never seen ANY real proof that earth would not be ellipsoid and we have nice schools here. So i'm about 100% certain earth is not flat. I mean this video would not be real if earth was flat :D

  • @Loopydude80
    @Loopydude809 ай бұрын

    earth is deffently round tho

  • @PeterDay81
    @PeterDay81 Жыл бұрын

    Have a look at Felix Baumgartner Skydives From Space.

  • @veronica6325
    @veronica632511 ай бұрын

    The Earth is round. It rotates on it's axis every 24 hours, and revolves around the sun evry 365.25 days. Accept it. It is also tilted on its axis, and depending where the Earth is in its yearly journey around the sun the tilt varies between 22.1 to 24.5 degrees. This means that the far north and far south of Earth can be tilted toward the Sun or tilted away from the Sun. When the far far north is leaning toward the Sun it can get up to 24 hours of daylight every day. Meanwhile the far far south is in the dark for 24 hours every day. The opposite happens when the Earth is tilted the other way. I have been to both the far north, and the far south. However I was never got the 24 hours of light or dark. Just 21 hours of each at opposite times of the year. And yeah, it messes up your internal clock. Especially when you first arrive.

  • @robbangagag
    @robbangagag5 ай бұрын

    Thats why we white

  • @ncbiz
    @ncbiz Жыл бұрын

    Alaska Americans

  • @thefabulousmeujwara
    @thefabulousmeujwara Жыл бұрын

    I always enjoy your reactions. THIS ONE HAS AN ECHO for some reason. Here's my suggestion for your next one. I know you avoid music because of possible strikes on your channel but I feel like this one might be safe 😉kzread.info/dash/bejne/nndtyKyvfrOZk9o.html

  • @MarkusWande
    @MarkusWande11 ай бұрын

    Too bad with the echo of your voices. Made it hard to listen to. :( Otherwise, nice rweaction.

  • @nosmokejazwinski6297
    @nosmokejazwinski6297 Жыл бұрын

    Earth is flat

  • @Majtzy

    @Majtzy

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol

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